does yogurt stop vaginal discharge

can eating yogurt help prevent from vaginal bacterial infections, other than yeast infections?

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No, yogurt will not help to prevent any bacterial infections. Yogurt only help with yeast infections because they help with balancing the pH in your body so that yeast will not have a suitable environment to grow or become overactive.

YES eating the proper kind of yogurt CAN help clear up and ward off vaginal Bacterial infections by promoting a healthy vaginal environment as well helping prevent the yeasty beasties.

Home Treatment

If you have been diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis (BV), you can use lactobacillus (as in yogurt) to help restore the balance of vaginal bacteria, either along with or instead of antibiotic treatment. If you are pregnant, remember to avoid vaginal administration of any treatment.

Lactobacillus acidophilus is the active culture found in some yogurts and is also available in health food stores in liquid, powder, and tablet form. For decades, women have used L. acidophilus to treat BV and yeast infection, with some success and without treatment side effects. This practice is thought to help recolonize the vaginal tract with lactobacillus organisms, reversing the conditions that allow harmful bacteria to thrive. Only small lactobacillus studies have been done thus far, so effectiveness data is sparse.

To treat BV with L. acidophilus, you can do one or more of the following:

Eat at least 8 oz (226.8 g) of yogurt with live L. acidophilus cultures as part of your long-term daily diet. In one small study, women who ate L. acidophilus yogurt for 2 months showed a drop in rates of BV. 5
Providing that you are not pregnant, you can directly treat the vaginal area with lactobacilli by inserting lactobacilli in gelatin capsules (which dissolve), tablet form, or yogurt form (with a vaginal medication applicator) into your vagina. Do this for 7 days. In one small study of yogurt application for 7 days, 88% of women were BV-free when tested 2 months after treatment. 5
Researchers have recently found that two different types of lactobacillus—L. crispatus and L. jensenii—are most commonly found in a healthy vaginal environment. Research is currently focusing on using these types of lactobacilli in capsules. 5